
NUH'S FLOOD
We sent Nuh to his people and he remained among
them for fifty short of a thousand years; yet the Flood engulfed
them while they were wrongdoers. (Qur'an, 29:14)
The Prophet Nuh (as) was sent to his people by Allah. They had
distanced themselves from the commandments of the Lord and ascribed
partners to Him. The Prophet Nuh (as) warned them that they should
serve Allah alone and abandon the false worship which they had established
in their community. Although the Prophet Nuh (as) called on his
people with great eloquence and wisdom, and warned them against
the punishment of Allah, they rejected the Prophet and continued
to associate partners to Him. At this, Allah told the Prophet Nuh
(as) that He would punish the deniers by drowning them. But He also
informed His Messenger that His mercy would save the believers,
those who embraced true religion and worshipped the One and Only
God. The destruction of the people of Nuh and the salvation of the
believers is described thus in the Qur'an:
But they denied him so We rescued him and those
with him in the Ark. And We drowned the people who denied Our
Signs. They were a blind people. (Qur'an, 7:64)
When the time of punishment came, the water in the ground combined
with violent rains to cause a giant flood. (Allah knows best.) It
is revealed that before the flood came, Allah spoke to the Prophet
Nuh (as):
We revealed to him: "Build the Ship under Our
supervision and as We reveal. When Our command comes and water
bubbles up from the earth, load into it a pair of every species,
and your family-except for those among them against whom the word
has already gone ahead. And do not address Me concerning those
who do wrong. They shall be drowned." (Qur'an, 23:27)
Apart from those who boarded Prophet Nuh's (as) Ark, the entire
tribe was drowned. The dead included the Prophet's son who thought
he could escape by seeking shelter on a mountain.
It was said, "Earth, swallow up your water!"
and, "Heaven, hold back your rain!" And the water subsided and
the affair was concluded and the Ark came to land on al-Judi.
And it was said, "Away with the people of the wrongdoers!" (Qur'an,
11:44)
Compared to the flood accounts contained in Jewish scriptures,
and indeed the various cultural beliefs of other peoples, the Qur'anic
account, which was revealed by Allah and is the only divine text
to have remained uncorrupted, stands as the most reliable of all
these accounts. The Torah, a corrupted text, says that this flood
was universal and covered the whole world. On the contrary, it appears
from the relevant verses that the flood was a regional one and punished
not the whole world but only the tribe that rejected the Prophet
Nuh (as). Those who were destroyed in it were the people who rejected
the message of the Prophet Nuh (as) and persisted in their denial.
There is no indication in the Qur'an that the flood was universal.
The verses on the subject read:
We sent Nuh to his people: "I am a clear warner
to you. Worship none but Allah. I fear for you the punishment
of a painful day." (Qur'an, 11:25-26)
But they denied him so We rescued him and those
with him in the Ark. And We drowned the people who denied Our
Signs. They were a blind people. (Qur'an, 7:64)
So We rescued him and those with him by mercy
from Us, and We cut off the last remnant of those who denied Our
Signs and were not believers. (Qur'an, 7:72)
As we have seen, we are told in the Qur'an that only the people
of the Prophet Nuh (as) were destroyed, not the whole world. The
corrected states of the corrupted accounts in Christian and Jewish
scriptures in the Qur'an prove that it is, in its entirety, a book
sent down by Allah.
Excavations in the region where the flood is believed to have occurred
also show that the flood was not a universal event, but a wide-scale
disaster that affected part of Mesopotamia.
When the waters subsided, the Ark came to rest. As revealed in
the Qur'an, the resting place of the ark was al-Judi. The word "judi"
is sometimes taken to mean a particular mountain, although the Arabic
word itself means "high place, hill." From that point of view, the
word "judi" can refer to the waters reaching only up to
a certain height and not to the covering of all the land. In other
words, we learn from the Qur'an that the flood did not swallow up
all the land and all the mountains on Earth-as is related in Jewish
scriptures and other legends-but only one particular region.
Archaeological Evidence for the Flood

According to the archaeological findings, Nuh’s Flood
took place on the Mesopotamian Plain, the shape of which was
very different to that of today. The present-day limits of the
plain are shown with a dotted red line in the above diagram.
The wide region beyond that line is known to have been part
of the sea at that time. |
If a natural disaster, sudden migration or war, for example, should
result in the destruction of a civilisation, traces of that civilisation
are well-protected. The houses people lived in and the objects people
used in their daily lives are quickly buried under the earth. These
are thus conserved for long periods without being touched by human
hands. For students of the past, they provide invaluable clues when
they are finally brought to light.
In recent times, the discovery of a large amount of evidence concerning
Nuh's Flood has come to the attention of the world's most prominent
archaeologists and historians. The Flood, believed to have occurred
around 3000 B.C., destroyed an entire civilisation and allowed an
entirely new one to be founded in its place. That evidence of the
Flood was preserved for thousands of years provides a deterrent
to those people who have come after this punishment of the wicked.
Many excavations have been carried out to study the flood, which
was localised on and around the Mesopotamian Plains. Digs in the
region have encountered traces of a flood in four main cities on
the Mesopotamian Plain: Ur, Erech, Kish and Shuruppak. Excavations
in these cities have shown that these cities were hit by flooding
around 3000 B.C.
The oldest of the remains of the civilisation in the city of Ur-today
known as Tell al Muqqayar-date back to 7000 B.C. The city of Ur,
one of the oldest human civilisations, was a settlement region in
which consecutive civilisations were born and died.
The archaeological discoveries which came from study of Ur unearthed
information which clearly informs us that a civilisation there was
interrupted by a terrible flood and that new civilisations gradually
sprang up in its place. Leonard Woolley led a joint excavation by
the British Museum and the University of Pennsylvania in the desert
area between Baghdad and the Persian Gulf. Woolley's excavations
are described by the German archaeologist Werner Keller as follows:
"The graves of the kings of Ur" - so Woolley,
in the exuberance of his delight at discovering them, had dubbed
the tombs of Sumerian nobles whose truly regal splendour had been
exposed when the spades of the archaeologists attacked a fifty-foot
mound south of the temple and found a long row of superimposed
graves. The stone vaults were veritable treasure chests, for they
were filled with all the costly goblets, wonderfully shaped jugs
and vases, bronze tableware, mother of pearl mosaics, lapis lazuli,
and silver surrounded these bodies which had mouldered into dust.
Harps and lyres rested against the walls
When after several days some of Woolley's workmen called out
to him, "We are on ground level", he let himself down onto the
floor of the shaft to satisfy himself. Woolley's first thought
was "This is it at last". It was sand, pure sand of a kind that
could only have been deposited by water.
They decided to dig on and make the shaft deeper. Deeper and
deeper went the spades into the ground: three feet, six feet -
still pure mud. Suddenly, at ten feet, the layer of mud stopped
as abruptly as it had started. Under this clay deposit of almost
ten feet thick, they had struck fresh evidence of human habitation
The Flood - that was the only possible explanation of this great
clay deposit beneath the hill at Ur, which quite clearly separated
two epochs of settlement
217

Excavations in the Mesopotamian Plain revealed the presence
of a layer of mud and clay at a depth of 2.5 metres (8 feet).
This stratum in all probability consisted of clay carried by
the waters of the Flood, and is to be found only under the Mesopotamian
Plain. |
Microscopic analysis revealed that this great clay deposit beneath
the hill at Ur had accumulated here as a result of a flood, one
so large and powerful as to annihilate ancient Sumerian civilisation.
The epic of Gilgamesh and the story of Nuh were united in this shaft
dug deep under the Mesopotamian desert.
Max Mallowan related the thoughts of Leonard
Woolley, who said that such a huge mass of alluvium formed in a
single time-slice could only be the result of a huge flood disaster.
Woolley also described the flood layer, which separated the Sumerian
city of Ur from the city of Al-Ubaid whose inhabitants used painted
pottery, as the remains of the Flood.218
These facts demonstrated that the city of Ur
was one of those places affected by the Flood. The German archaeologist
Werner Keller also described the importance of the excavation in
question. He has gone on record to say that the yield of city-remains
beneath a muddy layer in the archaeological excavations made in
Mesopotamia proves that there was indeed a flood in the region.219
Another Mesopotamian city to bear the traces
of the Flood is the "Kish of the Sumerians," the present-day Tall
Al-Uhaimer. Ancient Sumerian records describe this city as the "seat
of the first postdiluvian dynasty."220
The southern Mesopotamian city of Shuruppak,
the present-day Tall Fa'rah, also bears evident traces of the Flood.
Archaeological investigations were carried out in this city between
1920 and 1930 by Erich Schmidt of the University of Pennsylvania.
These excavations uncovered three layers of habitation which stretched
from the late prehistoric period to the 3rd dynasty of Ur (2112-2004
B.C.). The most distinctive finds were ruins of well-built houses
along with cuneiform tablets of administrative records and lists
of words, indicating a highly developed society already in existence
toward the end of the 4th millennium B.C.221
When one examines the opinions of these learned
scientists, it is clear that they believe that the evidence which
supports the Flood account is overwhelming. According to this opinion,
this terrible flood took place in or around 3000-2900 B.C. According
to Mallowan's account, 4-5 metres below the earth, Schmidt had reached
a yellow soil layer (formed by flood) made up of a mixture of clay
and sand. This layer was closer to the plain level than the tumulus
profile and it could be observed all around the tumulus. Schmidt
defined this layer made up of a mixture of clay and sand, which
remained from the time of Ancient Kingdom of Cemdet Nasr, as "a
sand with its origins in the river" and associated it with Nuh's
Flood.222
In short, the excavations in the city of Shuruppak
once again revealed the traces of a flood around 3000-2900 B.C.
Together with the other cities, Shuruppak was in all probability
struck by the Flood.223
The last settlement containing evidence of being
struck by the Flood is the city of Erech, south of Shuruppak. Today,
it is known as Tall Al-Warka. As in the other cities, a flood layer
was also discovered here. Like the other cities, this flood layer
has been dated to 3000-2900 B.C.224
The Euphrates and Tigris rivers divide Mesopotamia from one end
to the other. It appears that in the era in question, these two
rivers overflowed, together with all other water sources, great
and small, combining with rainwater to create an enormous flood.
This phenomenon is reported in these terms in the Qur'an:
So We opened the gates of heaven with torrential
water and made the earth burst forth with gushing springs. And
the waters met together in a way which was decreed. We bore him
on a planked and well-caulked ship. (Qur'an, 54:11-13)
When the clues obtained from the research are evaluated, they indicate
that the Flood covered all of the Mesopotamian plains. When we look
at the succession of cities-Ur, Erech, Shuruppak and Kish-that bear
the traces of the Flood, we see that they all lie in a line. In
addition, the geographical structure of the Mesopotamian Plain was
very different in around 3000 B.C. compared to its constitution
today. At that time, the bed of the River Euphrates was much further
to the east than it is today, lying on a line passing through Ur,
Erech, Shuruppak and Kish. It therefore appears that the Euphrates
burst its banks in this region and destroyed the four cities. (Allah
knows best.)
Allah imparted the news of Nuh's Flood in order that it should
act as a deterrent for those of that time and a valuable lesson
to those who were to come after, people like us. By means of the
Prophets and books, He sent guidance to different societies. However,
each time the texts which were brought to the people by Allah's
Prophets were corrupted from their original forms. Men added cultural,
mystical or mythological elements to the true account of the Flood.
The Qur'an, because it is from Allah and because He preserves it
eternally, is the only source compatible with the archaeological
findings of the past. (See Harun Yahya, Perished
Nations, Ta - Ha Publishers, 2002)

217. Werner Keller, Und die Bibel
hat doch recht (The Bible as History; a Confirmation of the Book
of Books)
(New York: William Morrow: 1964), 25-29. 
218. Max Mallowan, Noah’s Flood Reconsidered (Iraq: XXVI-2:
1964), 70.
219. Keller, Und die Bibel hat doch recht, 23-32.
220. “Kish,” Britannica Micropaedia 6, 893.
221. “Shuruppak,” Britannica Micropaedia 10, 772 
222. Max Mallowan, Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia, Cambridge
Ancient History 1-2, (Cambridge: 1971), 238.
223. Joseph Campbell, Eastern Mythology, 129.
224. Bilim ve Utopya (Science and Utopia), July 1996, 176. Footnote,
19.
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